Brent Premium Over WTI Has Been Rising With Crude Oil Price

 | Dec 01, 2020 10:21AM ET

  • The Brent premium reached a low before crude oil declined to the November 2 low
  • The premium has almost doubled from the low as crude oil recovered
  • Production cut extensions and rising inflationary pressures support the price of crude oil- Chinese demand is bullish for Brent crude oil
  • The West Texas Intermediate grade of crude oil trades on the CME’s NYMEX division. The Intercontinental Exchange (NYSE:ICE) trades futures contracts on Brent North Sea crude oil. WTI and Brent are the two benchmarks for the oil market.

    While there are many other crude oil grades, approximately one-third of the world’s oil producers and consumers use the WTI price as a benchmark, and two-thirds employ the Brent price as a pricing mechanism. Crude oils in different locations trade at premiums or discounts depending on supply and demand factors. Varying grades of petroleum command higher or lower prices compared to the benchmarks.

    WTI is a lighter and sweeter grade of crude oil, meaning it has a lower sulfur content and is preferable for refining into gasoline, the most ubiquitous crude oil product. Brent’s higher sulfur and heavier composition make it more appropriate for processing into distillates such as heating oil, jet, and diesel fuels.

    Meanwhile, the spread between Brent and WTI is one piece of the jigsaw puzzle for analyzing crude oil fundamentals. Brent-WTI is a quality spread when it comes to the grades and chemical composition of the two forms of petroleum. It is a location spread as the delivery point for WTI is Cushing, Oklahoma, and Brent is in the North Sea. Crude oil from Europe, Africa, and the Middle East tend to use the Brent benchmark for pricing. WTI tends to be landlocked, while Brent is a seaborne crude oil.